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The Book Club :
The Deepest Well

Topic is Sleeping.
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 PeriodicZen (original poster member #62223) posted at 8:48 PM on Tuesday, April 10th, 2018

This book, by Dr. Nadine Burke-Harris, explains amazingly well the problems with trauma during childhood and how it is reflected in poor health outcomes for the adults that experienced those traumatic events.

She goes on to talk about Adverse Childhood Experiences, ACEs, and how those leave sequels that will severely impact both physically and emotionally the adults that have some trauma during childhood.

And, most importantly, she goes to great length to explain that these ACEs are equally hurting people in high, medium and low income brackets: that it doesn’t matter how wealthy, or educated, or influential a family was, if there was a traumatic experience in the children’s life, it has to be addressed or it will cause problem many years later.

I know that a lot of people talk about FOO, so this is a very interesting explanation not for the decisions from the FOO, but for the health issues that often surround people that were exposed to trauma during childhood.

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Me, BH
WW: EA/PA
DDay January 8th, 2018.

IHS

posts: 390   ·   registered: Jan. 11th, 2018   ·   location: Durham, NC
id 8137713
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burninghouse ( member #63308) posted at 1:49 AM on Thursday, April 12th, 2018

Periodic Zen, I haven't read this book but have stumbled across information on ACEs in my search for deeper healing. What you bring up I believe is highly relevant stuff.

The Adverse Childhood Events info. led me to explore Attachment Theory, on which there are several books written. One very eye-opening book is by Amir Levine called Attached.

Seems there's been a (somewhat silent) push for ACEs to be part of every doctor and counselor/therapist intake assessment. I agree.

What you said echoes what I had found, that several studies (many done in the 90s) show extremely compelling evidence that correlate ACEs with all kinds of major diseases and even early death! The studies also showed that at least 60% of the U.S. population suffers from ACEs. This is BIG.

In some earlier searches, I came across healing modalities that are body-centered. Found out that early traumatic stress gets stored in the body's tissues. Apparently our childhood brains (before age 7, some say before age 12) are not yet fully wired and can't consciously process early trauma and can't store it as explicit memories. So the trauma gets pushed down, hidden away in the subconscious mind (and not accessible by regular means). Meanwhile all the stress chemicals are stored in the body's tissues and wreak havoc on the entire system.

Plus we have lost a lot of our natural ability to release stress. Animals in the wild often shake or jump around after a traumatic event. This "dumps" the excess stress chemicals and recalibrates the body. That's probably why walking, "shaking it off" or any kind of rhythmic motion helps so much after a stressful event.

I believe it's also why regular talk therapy can't fully address what needs to be healed. Everything is so hidden away in the subconscious, and talk therapy typically deals with higher order brain functioning, not the primitive subconscious that has no language, no logic and no sense of time as we know it. It really seems there needs to be a combination of modalities for true healing to take place.

Agree that ACEs negatively impact relationships since they are highly relevant to FOO issues. And symptoms of "Attachment Disorders" are so clearly mirrored in classic relationship issues such as codependency and narcissism.

I believe what you're bringing to light digs at the very roots of such a big problem that affects SO MANY people. Most of us aren't even aware of it!

I've never had a doctor or therapist ask about ACEs, but I've noticed there are some schools now offering "Trauma Informed Care" certificates and programs for health practitioners. So I'm really hopeful all of this will become mainstream and health professionals recognize how pervasive this is. The sooner the better.

Please excuse the long-winded reply! I get worked up about this subject. I think this stuff can lead the way to better understanding and deeper healing. I'm definitely going to take a look at the Burke-Harris book, thanks!!!

BW (me)
WH (him)
D-day 3/2018
Divorcing

Reminding myself often, "The last of the human freedoms: to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” Viktor Frankl

posts: 457   ·   registered: Apr. 3rd, 2018
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burninghouse ( member #63308) posted at 1:54 AM on Thursday, April 12th, 2018

Also...

I haven't yet read this book, but it's relevant to our discussion:

The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel Van Der Kolk, M.D.

BW (me)
WH (him)
D-day 3/2018
Divorcing

Reminding myself often, "The last of the human freedoms: to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” Viktor Frankl

posts: 457   ·   registered: Apr. 3rd, 2018
id 8139164
Topic is Sleeping.
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